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Inflation Report November 2014 Costs and prices. Chart 4.1 CPI inflation projected to fall in Q4 Bank staff projection for near-term CPI inflation (a)

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Presentation on theme: "Inflation Report November 2014 Costs and prices. Chart 4.1 CPI inflation projected to fall in Q4 Bank staff projection for near-term CPI inflation (a)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Inflation Report November 2014 Costs and prices

2 Chart 4.1 CPI inflation projected to fall in Q4 Bank staff projection for near-term CPI inflation (a) (a)The red diamonds show Bank staff’s central projection for CPI inflation in July, August and September 2014 at the time of the August Inflation Report. The blue diamonds show the staff projection for October, November and December 2014. The bands on each side of the blue and red diamonds show the root mean squared error of the projections for CPI inflation one, two and three months ahead made since 2004.

3 Chart 4.2 Food and fuel prices now weighing on inflation Contributions to CPI inflation (a) (a)Monthly contributions to annual CPI inflation. Data are non seasonally adjusted. (b) Calculated as the difference between CPI inflation and the contributions to CPI inflation from the goods or services identified in the chart.

4 Chart 4.3 Sterling oil prices have fallen sharply Sterling oil and wholesale gas prices Sources: Bank of England, Bloomberg, Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a)Brent forward prices for delivery in 10–21 days’ time converted into sterling. (b)One-day forward price of UK natural gas. (c)Futures prices at the time of the August Inflation Report are averages during the fifteen working days to 6 August 2014. Futures prices at the time of the November Inflation Report are averages during the fifteen working days to 5 November 2014.

5 Chart 4.4 Oil supply growth robust in 2014 Growth in oil supply and demand Sources: International Energy Agency Oil Market Report© OECD/IEA 2014 and Bank calculations. (a)Data are to 2014 Q3.

6 Chart 4.5 Food commodity prices well below recent peaks US dollar food commodity prices (a) Sources: S&P indices and Thomson Reuters Datastream. (a)Calculated using S&P US dollar commodity price indices. (b)Includes grain prices.

7 Chart 4.6 Sterling’s appreciation has weighed on UK import prices UK import and foreign export prices excluding fuel Sources: Bank of England, CEIC, Eurostat, ONS, Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a)Domestic currency non-oil export prices of goods and services of 49 countries weighted according to their shares in UK imports, divided by the sterling effective exchange rate. The sample does not include any major oil exporters. In 2014 Q2, export prices for Croatia, Cyprus, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Latvia, Netherlands, Pakistan, Philippines, Portugal, Slovenia, South Africa, Switzerland and Turkey are assumed to grow at the same rate as export prices in the rest of the world excluding the euro area and the United States. (b)Goods and services deflator excluding fuels and the impact of MTIC fraud. (c)Domestic currency non-oil export prices as defined in footnote (a).

8 Chart 4.7 Unit labour costs have fallen sharply Whole-economy and private sector unit labour costs (a) Sources: ONS and Bank calculations. (a)Calculated as labour costs divided by GDP. Labour costs are compensation of employees, including estimated self-employment income. Self-employment income is calculated from mixed income, assuming that the share of employment income in that is the same as the share of employee compensation in nominal GDP less mixed income. GDP is based on Bank staff’s backcast, which involves using survey indicators and past GDP revisions to make a judgement about likely future revisions to the ONS’s output data, as discussed in Cunningham, A and Jeffery, C (2007), ‘Extracting a better signal from uncertain data’, Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, Vol. 47, No. 3, pages 364–75; www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/quarterlybulletin/qb070301.pdf. Private sector unit labour costs exclude general government wages and salaries and employers’ social contributions and are calculated by using Bank staff’s backcast for output generated in the private sector. www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Documents/quarterlybulletin/qb070301.pdf

9 Chart 4.8 Non-wage costs have pulled down unit labour cost growth Decomposition of four-quarter whole-economy unit labour cost growth (a) Sources: ONS and Bank calculations. (a)Unit labour costs and self-employment income are defined as in Chart 4.7.

10 Chart 4.9 Official pay data remain weak relative to survey indicators Estimates of pay growth Sources: Bank of England, BCC, KPMG/REC/Markit, ONS and Bank calculations. (a)The Bank’s Agents’ scores and the BCC survey are produced by weighting together manufacturing and service sector indicators according to their employment shares. The Bank’s Agents’ scores are a quarterly average of monthly data, and are available from June 1998. (b)Four-quarter moving average measure. (c)The REC measure is produced by weighting together survey indices for the pay of permanent and temporary placements using shares in employment; quarterly averages. (d)Private sector pay excluding bonuses and arrears of pay.

11 Chart 4.10 Companies’ margins have been broadly unchanged over the past year Private sector corporate profit share (excluding financial corporations and the oil sector) Sources: ONS and Bank calculations. (a)Recessions are defined as at least two consecutive quarters of falling output (at constant market prices) estimated using the latest data. The recessions are assumed to end once output began to rise. (b)Gross trading profits of PNFCs (excluding continental shelf companies) less the alignment adjustment divided by nominal gross value added at factor cost.

12 Tables

13 Table 4.A Monitoring the MPC’s key judgements

14 Table 4.B Official estimates of wage growth remain weak Private sector earnings Sources: Bank of England, Incomes Data Services, the Labour Research Department, ONS and XpertHR. (a)Figures for 2014 Q3 are estimates based on data for July and August and Bank staff projections for September. (b)Private sector total pay excluding bonuses and arrears of pay. (c)Percentage points. The bonus contribution does not always equal the difference between total AWE growth and AWE regular pay growth due to rounding. (d)Average over the past twelve months, based on monthly data.

15 Table 4.C Changing composition of the labour force may have weighed on pay growth Employment growth and earnings by occupation Sources: Labour Force Survey and Bank calculations. (a)Uses the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) 2000. Seasonally adjusted by Bank staff. (b)The high-skilled category includes managers, professional and associated professional and technical occupations. The low-skilled category includes elementary occupations, plant machine operatives, sales and customer services. The medium-skilled category is calculated as the change in total employment less changes in employment in high and low-skilled occupations. (c)Non seasonally adjusted LFS gross weekly pay. Averages weighted by share of employees in each occupational category. High and low-skilled categories defined as in (b). The medium-skilled category includes administrative, secretarial, personal services occupations and skilled trades.

16 Table 4.D Inflation expectations remain well anchored Indicators of inflation expectations (a) Sources: Bank of England, Barclays Capital, Bloomberg, CBI (all rights reserved), Citigroup, GfK NOP, ONS, YouGov and Bank calculations. (a)Data are non seasonally adjusted. (b)Dates in parentheses indicate start date of the data series. (c)Financial markets data are averages from 1 October to 5 November 2014. YouGov/Citigroup data are for October. (d)The household surveys ask about expected changes in prices but do not reference a specific price index, and the measures are based on the median estimated price change. (e)CBI data for the manufacturing, business/consumer services and distribution sectors, weighted together using nominal shares in value added. Companies are asked about the expected percentage price change over the coming twelve months in the markets in which they compete. (f)Instantaneous RPI inflation one year ahead implied from swaps. (g)Bank’s survey of external forecasters, inflation rate three years ahead. (h) Instantaneous RPI inflation three years ahead implied from swaps. (i)Five-year, five-year forward RPI inflation implied from swaps.


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